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Potential Mechanisms Driving Population Variation in Spatial Memory and the Hippocampus in Food-caching Chickadees

机译:诱食山雀中空间记忆和海马种群变异的潜在机制

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Harsh environments and severe winters have been hypothesized to favor improvement of the cognitive abilities necessary for successful foraging. Geographic variation in winter climate, then, is likely associated with differences in selection pressures on cognitive ability, which could lead to evolutionary changes in cognition and its neural mechanisms, assuming that variation in these traits is heritable. Here, we focus on two species of food-caching chickadees (genus Poecile), which rely on stored food for survival over winter and require the use of spatial memory to recover their stores. These species also exhibit extensive climate-related population level variation in spatial memory and the hippocampus, including volume, the total number and size of neurons, and adults' rates of neurogenesis. Such variation could be driven by several mechanisms within the context of natural selection, including independent, population-specific selection (local adaptation), environment experience-based plasticity, developmental differences, and/or epigenetic differences. Extensive data on cognition, brain morphology, and behavior in multiple populations of these two species of chickadees along longitudinal, latitudinal, and elevational gradients in winter climate are most consistent with the hypothesis that natural selection drives the evolution of local adaptations associated with spatial memory differences among populations. Conversely, there is little support for the hypotheses that environment-induced plasticity or developmental differences are the main causes of population differences across climatic gradients. Available data on epigenetic modifications of memory ability are also inconsistent with the observed patterns of population variation, with birds living in more stressful and harsher environments having better spatial memory associated with a larger hippocampus and a larger number of hippocampal neurons. Overall, the existing data are most consistent with the hypothesis that highly predictable differences in winter climate drive the evolution and maintenance of differences among populations both in cognition and in the brain via local adaptations, at least in food-caching parids.
机译:假设恶劣的环境和严冬,有利于提高成功觅食所需的认知能力。因此,假设这些特征的变化是可遗传的,那么冬季气候的地理变化很可能与认知能力选择压力的差异有关,这可能导致认知及其神经机制的进化变化。在这里,我们着重介绍两种可储存食物的山雀(Poecile属),它们依靠储存的食物在冬季生存,并需要利用空间记忆来恢复它们的储存。这些物种在空间记忆和海马体中还表现出与气候有关的种群水平的广泛变化,包括数量,神经元的总数和大小以及成年人的神经发生率。在自然选择的背景下,这种变化可能由多种机制驱动,包括独立的,针对特定人群的选择(局部适应),基于环境经验的可塑性,发育差异和/或表观遗传差异。关于冬季气候下这两种山雀的多个种群在纵向,纬度和海拔梯度上的多个种群的认知,脑形态和行为的广泛数据,与自然选择驱动与空间记忆差异相关的局部适应进化的假设最一致。在人群中。相反,很少有人支持环境引起的可塑性或发育差异是整个气候梯度上人口差异的主要原因。关于记忆能力的表观遗传学修饰的现有数据也与观察到的种群变化模式不一致,生活在压力更大和更恶劣的环境中的鸟类具有与更大的海马和更多的海马神经元相关的更好的空间记忆。总的来说,现有数据与以下假设最相符:冬季气候中高度可预测的差异通过局部适应,至少是在食物保存方面,通过认知和大脑驱动人口差异的演变和维持。

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